Why in the news?
- Bangladesh joined the UN Water Convention, making it the first South Asian Country to accede to the framework.
UN Water Convention
- Adoption: Adopted in 1992 at Helsinki (Finland) under the framework of the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE) and entered into force in 1996.
- Objectives:
- To promote sustainable management, protection, and reasonable use of transboundary rivers, lakes, and groundwater.
- To prevent, control, and reduce transboundary impacts (e.g., pollution, overuse, ecosystem damage).
- To foster international cooperation for equitable sharing of water resources.
- Features:
- Initially regional in scope (UNECE countries), but amended in 2003 to allow global accession (open to all UN member states from 2016 onward).
- It complements the 1997 UN Convention on the Law of the Non-Navigational Uses of International Watercourses (UN Watercourses Convention).
- Key Provisions:
- Equitable and reasonable utilization by all riparian states.
- Prevention of transboundary harm
- Prior notification and consultation before implementing projects likely to have transboundary impact.
- Cooperation through joint bodies for monitoring, data exchange, and conflict resolution.
- Public participation and access to information
- Integrated Water Resources Management (IWRM) including basin-wide and ecosystem-based approaches.
- Global Significance:
- A legal framework for more than 150 transboundary river and lake basins globally.
- Enhances cooperation among riparian states to prevent conflicts and promote shared benefits.
- Helps implement SDG 6.5- “implement integrated water resources management, including transboundary cooperation”.
- Supports climate resilience, as shared basins are critical for adaptation and disaster risk reduction.
- India’s Stance:
- India is not a party to the UN Water Convention.
- Concerns relate to possible internationalization of bilateral river issues and potential constraints on India’s existing treaties like the Indus Waters Treaty.
- India prefers bilateral and regional arrangements for transboundary water management instead of multilateral conventions.